GC logs

The next source for GC-related information is accessible via garbage collector logs. As they are built in the JVM, GC logs give you (arguably) the most useful and comprehensive overview about garbage collector activities. GC logs are de facto standard and should be referenced as the ultimate source of truth for garbage collector evaluation and optimization.

A garbage collector log is in plain text and can be either printed out by the JVM to standard output or redirected to a file. There are many JVM options related to GC logging. For example, you can log the total time for which the application was stopped before and during each GC event (-XX:+PrintGCApplicationStoppedTime) or expose the information about different reference types being collected (-XX:+PrintReferenceGC).

The minimum that each JVM should be logging can be achieved by specifying the following in your startup scripts:

This will instruct JVM to print every GC event to the log file and add the timestamp of each event to the log. The exact information exposed to the logs varies depending on the GC algorithm used. When using ParallelGC the output should look similar to the following:

These different formats are discussed in detail in the chapter “GC Algorithms: Implementations”, so if you are not familiar with the output, please read this chapter first. If you can already interpret the output above, then you are able to deduct that:

The log is extracted around 200 seconds after the JVM was started.

During the 780 milliseconds present in the logs, the JVM paused five times for GC (we are excluding the 6th pause as it started, not ended on the timestamp present). All these pauses were full GC pauses.

The total duration of these pauses was 777 milliseconds, or 99.6% of the total runtime.

At the same time, as seen from the old generation capacity and consumption, almost all of the old generation capacity (169,472 kB) remains used (169,318 K) after the GC has repeatedly tried to free up some memory.

From the output, we can confirm that the application is not performing well in terms of GC. The JVM is almost stalled, with GC eating away more than 99% of the available computing power. And as a result of all this cleaning, almost all the old generation still remains in use, further confirming our suspicions. The example application, being the same as used in the previous jstat section, died in just a few minutes later with the “java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: GC overhead limit exceeded” error, confirming that the problem was severe.

As seen from the example, GC logs are valuable input to reveal symptoms about JVM health in terms of misbehaving garbage collectors. As general guidelines, the following symptoms can quickly be revealed by just looking at GC logs:

Too much GC overhead. When the total time for GC pauses is too long, the throughput of the application suffers. The limit is application-specific, but as a general rule anything over 10% already looks suspicious.

Excessively long individual pauses. Whenever an individual pause starts taking too long, the latency of the application starts to suffer. When the latency requirements require the transactions in the application to complete under 1,000 ms, for example, you cannot tolerate any GC pauses taking more than 1,000 ms.

Old generation consumption at the limits. Whenever the old generation remains close to being fully utilized even after several full GC cycles, you face a situation in which GC becomes the bottleneck, either due to under-provisioning resources or due to a memory leak. This symptom always triggers GC overhead to go through the roof as well.

As we can see, GC logs can give us very detailed information about what is going on inside the JVM in relation to garbage collection. However, for all but the most trivial applications, this results in vast amounts of data, which tend to be difficult to read and interpret by a human being.